Spiritual Awakening
Acts 2: 42 – 47
Introduction
I
have been thinking about Spiritual Awakening over the past few weeks. I have been thinking about it, because I
don’t believe what we have been experiencing as a church is not God’s best for
us. I believe God wants something else
from us.
According to Jim Denison (of the Denison Forum on Truth and
Culture), the Christian faith is growing faster today than at any other time in
history. It is estimated that at least 82,000 people are becoming
Christians every day. That is the lowest estimate. Some people
estimate that the number is over 200,000 new Christians every day. (100,000 new Christians per day in China alone.)[1]
Of course, some of us hear those statistics and have our doubts.
We are not experiencing that kind of spiritual growth and spiritual
awakening in Lufkin , Texas . How can we say that
Christianity is growing faster today than at any other time in history when we
can’t see it happening in our own community? There are two answers…
First, there is a spiritual awakening taking place in Africa,
Asia, Australia and South America . But, there is no spiritual awakening
taking place in Europe and North America .
For example, there are 82,000 people becoming Christians every day around
the world. BUT, only 6,000 people become Christians every day in Europe
and North America COMBINED. (That is to
say, approximately 7% of all new Christians live in Europe and North America .)
Second, spiritual awakening happens when we adopt a biblical
view of God. The Bible teaches us that God wants to be our King. After all, Jesus came preaching about the Kingdom of God —the realm in which God is the
King. The church is supposed to
demonstrate that God is our King. When that happens, spiritual awakening
takes place. But, this is not happening in the United States of America . In
our country, we don’t like to talk about God as our King. We prefer to
talk about God as our hobby. God is not our Monday through Friday
work. God is something we reserve for
the weekend…like working in the yard, playing golf, going fishing, etc…
In the cultures where the church proclaims God as King,
Christianity is growing at unprecedented rates. In the cultures where the
church proclaims God as our hobby, Islam is growing faster than Christianity.
What would our church look like if God really was our King? We could learn from the first church, which
formed after the Day of Pentecost in Acts 2.
Acts 2: 42 – 47.
42 They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.
43 Everyone was filled with awe, and many wonders and miraculous signs were done by the apostles.
44 All the believers were together and had everything in common.
45 Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need.
46 Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts,
47 praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.
(NIV)
After the resurrection, Jesus spent forty days with his
disciples. In these forty days, Jesus reminded the disciples of
everything he had taught them during his earthly ministry. Jesus also
instructed the disciples in their new roles—they were to continue the work
Jesus began. When Jesus ascended into Heaven, Jesus would send them the
Holy Spirit to be present in their lives and to be their source of Power to
perform the same kinds of work Jesus performed in his earthly life.
But…Jesus told his disciples to wait. They were not supposed to go
to work until they were filled with the Holy Spirit.
The disciples obeyed Jesus. After Jesus ascended into
Heaven, the disciples waited in Jerusalem
for another 10 days. After 10 days, the Holy Spirit came, and a miracle
took place. The same disciples who were once so frightened they could not
stand up with Jesus were now empowered with supernatural power to preach the
Gospel to their friends, family members and neighbors.
Remarkably, Peter stood up and preached to a crowd of thousands
of people. This was the same Peter who once denied even knowing who Jesus
was, because he was afraid for his life. The Bible tells us that Peter’s
sermon led to an enthusiastic response to the Gospel. Over 3,000 people
placed their faith in Jesus as Lord…Affirming that God is the King of their
lives.
But what happened next? What happened when the disciples
stopped preaching? These 3,000 new
believers organized into the first Christian church. This was no ordinary
church. It was unique because it was the first church. But, it was
also unique because it was a church which proclaimed God as their King.
If we want to be a church which proclaims God as our King, we ought to
follow their example.
The Apostles’ Teaching
The first way the church demonstrated that “God is their King”
is the way they devoted themselves to the Apostles’ teachings.
Before the Holy Spirit came at Pentecost, there were 12 Apostles
and a total of 120 Christians. All of these people had lived with Jesus.
The Apostles had sat at Jesus’ feet and listened to all his teachings.
The rest of the Christians had followed Jesus in the crowds, witnessing
all the miracles and learning from Jesus’ public sermons. They knew what
Jesus had stood for and what he had come to accomplish in his death and
resurrection.
After the Holy Spirit came, over 3,000 new believers committed
their lives to Jesus as Lord. These people did not have the same kind of
knowledge and understanding about what Jesus had done for them.
Therefore, it was now necessary for the 12 Apostles to share what they
knew about Jesus with others.
The most important thing we can say about the Apostles’
Teaching, is to say that they were teaching others what Jesus had taught them.
The Apostles were not making up new teachings to share with the new
believers. They were giving others what Jesus had first given them.
In the Twenty-First Century, this is the same thing as teaching the
Bible. We teach the Bible, because the Bible is God’s Word. It
contains the teachings of Jesus passed down to his Apostles, who in turn wrote
it down so that we can know what Jesus has done for us.
The Fellowship
The church was also devoted to a new kind of fellowship.
This is the Greek word “Koinonia.” It refers to fellowship in the
sense of Christian brothers and sisters relating to each other through the love
of Christ. The heart of the word “Koinonia” is the Greek word “koinos,”
which means common. In other words, these new Christians had something in
common with the original 12 Apostles and the original 120 Christians.
I find it noteworthy that Luke does not say the early church was
committed to “fellowship.” He says they were committed to “THE
fellowship.” There is something different, something unique about the
fellowship these Christians shared with one another.
For me, I have always associated fellowship with the
church. And, I have always associated church fellowships with pimento and
cheese sandwiches with the crust cut off.
That might be “a fellowship,” but it is not “THE fellowship” Luke was
talking about in this passage.
THE fellowship is the significant bond we share with each other
that can only come as a result of our relationship with Jesus. When a man
or woman places their faith in Jesus, something supernatural occurs. At
the moment we profess our faith, God places his Holy Spirit in us to begin the
work of shaping us into the image of Jesus. When a group of people whom
God is shaping to become like Jesus get together in the church, God begins to
work on that church. God shapes that community of believers into the
image of Jesus. Just as God is working on you and me as individuals to
make us more like Jesus, so God is working on our church to make us more like
Jesus.
THE fellowship of Christian brothers and sisters is different
from the community life on non-Christians. God is forming us into a
community like no other. He is placing in us the same loves and desires
that Jesus demonstrated in his life. THE fellowship we experience is a
missional experience. Sure, we like to hang out with each other and laugh
together. But, we also feel called—even compelled by God—to meet the
needs of the world around us and to share the life-changing message of the
cross.
One Demonstration of Fellowship:
Selling Their Possessions, They Gave…
This
is a source of great debate. Among many theologians, there is a belief
that the early church practiced a form of socialism. They claim that
individual church members did not own property. They think this is God’s
ideal for us, even today.
I do not subscribe to this interpretation. In fact, there
is evidence here that Luke did not want to communicate this kind of shared
property. Luke described the church’s action by using a Greek Imperfect
tense. The Imperfect tense is translated as “continuous action in past
time.” In other words, we can translate this as “they kept on selling
their possessions to give to those in need.” If they did this in a
continual sense, then it suggests they continued to own property and continued
to sell that property to give the money to the church. Also, we later
read examples of Barnabas as well as Ananias and Sapphira who sold their
property at a later time, suggesting that they did not sell everything at this
one time in history.
The best way to describe what the Christians were doing here is
to compare it with stewardship—stewardship as an expression of fellowship.
They used their personal possessions and their personal wealth in ways
that demonstrated the life of Jesus. They gave to those in need, and they
gave to advance the Kingdom
of God missionally.
The Breaking of Bread
There are at least three ways to interpret the words “the
breaking of bread.” This might be a reference to the Lord’s Supper—the
act of eating bread and drinking wine (or grape juice) in remembrance of Jesus’
death on the cross.
This might be a reference to the simple act of sharing a meal
together. There is no better place to see community life in action than
to observe people who are eating together. Some have interpreted this as
a reference to the Lord’s Supper—the act of eating bread and drinking wine (or
grape juice) in remembrance of Jesus’ sacrificial death. Others interpret
this as simply sharing food together. I prefer to think of this as simply
sharing a meal together.
We believe the book of Acts is the second volume of Luke’s
account of Christianity. The first volume is the Gospel According to
Luke. One of the many consistent themes in the Gospel According to Luke
is the criticism Jesus faced as a result of his eating habits. In Luke,
Jesus rarely ate supper with good, religious people. Most of the time,
Luke tells us that Jesus ate supper with tax collectors and sinners. The
religious folks did not like this, because it was against their customs to eat
with people who were different from them. Jesus broke the religious and
cultural norms of his day by sharing his meals with “undesirable” people.
Some of you are old enough to remember the civil unrest in our
country during the Civil Rights movement of the 1960’s and 1970’s. One
aspect of the Civil Rights movement related to the restaurants and lunch
counters in our country. The burning question of the day was: Should
black men and women be allowed to eat with white people? The reason this
was such an issue is because sharing a meal with another person is like saying
we consider that person our equal. All social barriers are broken down
when people sit shoulder to shoulder at the same table.
I find it remarkable that the 120 Jewish men and women who made
up the very first Christians were comfortable eating at the same table with
foreigners. They abandoned their Jewish, social norms in favor of a new
kind of community where all who believe in Jesus are considered equal.
The third way we can interpret the words “the breaking of bread”
is to observe one of the earliest practices of the early church. The
church ate a meal together as a part of their corporate worship. Eating
together demonstrated their unity BEFORE they entered into worship together in
music and preaching. As such, we can interpret this in the context of our
worship. A church who proclaims God as our King will be devoted to unity
in worship… Worship that brings us together…Worship that demonstrates how much
we have in common, rather than how much we don’t have in common
The Prayers
Literally, Luke tells us the new community was devoted to “THE
prayers.” This leads many scholars to interpret this as reference to the
official Jewish practice of religion. In other words, the church
abandoned their traditional social norms but did not abandon the worship of God
in the Temple .
In much of the Book of Acts, we continue to see the Apostles teaching and
preaching in the Temple
and showing how Jesus is the fulfillment of everything the Jews had been hoping
for in the Old Testament. As long as the Gospel was preached primarily in
Jerusalem , the
early church remained closely connected to the Jewish Temple. When the Gospel
began to spread outside of the Jewish race, Christian worship became separate
from Judaism.
That is a great historical fact, but it does not translate very
well to our Twenty-First Century American, Christian lives. What does
translate is the way the early Christians were committed to the power of God
that is only possible through prayer.
What do you think about people who pray? Some people think
prayer is a sign of weakness. They think people who pray cannot take care
of their own needs under their own power and abilities. These people are exactly
right. This is why we pray. We pray, because we need God. We
pray, because we cannot make it on our own power and abilities. We pray
in order to express our total dependence on God for even our smallest needs.
Without God and his power, we can do nothing.
This is true for individuals. This is true for churches.
A church that prays acknowledges God as our King. A church that
refuses to pray thinks of God as nothing more than a hobby.
Conclusion
A church in which God is only a hobby looks a lot like a country
club. Think about it. A country club usually has a golf pro or a
tennis pro. The pro is the recognized
expert, and he usually provides teaching and lessons. A country club has a board of directors, who
run the club, manage the finances and make sure the club meets the needs of
their dues-paying members. A country
club has a staff who get their paychecks from the club in exchange for serving
the needs of the dues-paying members. In
fact, that is the sole purpose of a country club—to serve the needs of the
dues-paying members and make sure that everyone is happy with the club.
Sadly, some churches look more like country clubs than churches.
Are you currently praying for our church? Do you spend
time during the week praying for God to move in our church?
What do you suppose would happen if we had groups of people
praying for our church every day of the week? What if your Sunday School
class or your group of friends took time to pray for God’s leadership? God
would bring a Spiritual Awakening!
Frankly, we can’t have a Spiritual Awakening in our church by
our own power or abilities. We won’t
experience Awakening until we stop treating God as a hobby and start living
with God as our King! God can use us to change the world.
[1] http://www.denisonforum.org/redeeming-9-11/118-join-the-fifth-great-awakening
; Also, see Jim Denison’s presentations for Spiritual Renewal Weekend, FBC
Shreveport, LA: “The Fifth Great Awakening,” http://vimeo.com/14557474
; “Is God Your Hobby?” http://vimeo.com/14560144
; “Is God Your King?” http://vimeo.com/14562875
.